Re: David Kendall found and also a deserter
yep, your correct Brent, The famous major marlowe or marlowe in the Knauss book is buried in the Union Cemetery in grave without a stone. And I agree with you about the other information too. This particular thread is a bit confusing because Henry Kendall is really buried at Greenlawn and his brother David is buried up in Chocston County, sorry for the spelling. They were both deserters of the 8th Virginia Regiment and both ended up in the county. It appears to have been a hot bed for Confederate and Union deserters. Henry Kendall as you probably know by now was both a Confederate and Union deserter. He enlisted in the 1st Ct. Cavarly rather than to do his time as a POW. The ironic thing is that Henry Kendall's father-in-law was in charge of hunting down deserters. I often wonder if his father-in-law ever knew? Of course he was married in 1869 well after the War.